ge 4-Wednesday, October 4, 1 978-The Michigan Daily Eighty-Nine Years of Editorial Freedom What do you do when they don't want to die Vol. UX, No.24 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan U' presidential 'selection: hose affected should decide HE REGENTS are eight public of- ficials who are elected by the le of this state to oversee the ations of the University. But we t remember that being a regent is condary importance in each of their s. They are businesspersons, 'ers, parents and spouses 29 days e month, and University officials wo days. So why should they have ;rary control over the selection of w university president? e persons who will be most eted by the president will be lty and students, not the Regents. ire here every day for four years, faculty members for even longer that. When the University ident makes a decision, it does not Ipt or even physically affect the r lives of the Regents, but it can :ally alter the living and working itions for students and faculty. these reasons, students and lty must have some influence in rmining the new president - even Regents would concur - but the tion is how much? der the current plan, there would ree separate advisory committees would make recommendations to legents. One committee would be ;rised of 15faculty members, and >ther two would have 10 students LO alumni. ese three committees would pendently submit lists of names to ierick Wagman, special secretary ; selection committee, who.would, arch each candidate, and return ground and biographical material e committees. e groups, would review this trial, pare their lists to some yet to ;reed upon number, and submit final lists to the Regents. The would be submitted anonymously- event the Regents from weighing group's list more heavily than ber's just because of the identity of oembers of the group. p main problem with this method at the Regents would not be bound k a new president from any of the If they so choose, they may ftly consider candidates of their and select one of them without Japut from faculty or students. recognize that the Regents have pke in who becomes the new dent, but it seems wholly unjust hem to be able to choose someone -without at least hearing the students' and faculty's views on the person. We are not opposed to the Regents making the final decision, as long as the choice is made from a list of candidates that has been carefully scrutinized by all interested parties - faculty, students, alumni, and regents. Therefore, we suggest the following process be adopted: The three current committees - student, faculty and alumni. - would be retained, but a fourth group would be added - the Regents. The groups would now follow the same procedure of submitting names to Mr. Wagman who would in return supply the committees with biographical information. The four groups would now meet together to hear each other's views on the preliminary lists, and taking their counterpart's . opinions into consideration, each group would pare its list to some agreed-upon number. Then, the regent, student and faculty committees would each choose two representatives to form the final' selection committee.. The reason for the exclusion of the alumni is that they would be less affected by the final choice.- We believe their interests would be equitably satisfied by simply being allowed to submit names, and to scrutinize the other committee choices. This final selection comntittee would discuss and review all those recommended by the individual groups. Ideally, these names would also be made public, so as to solicit reaction and response from the campus community -at large. The committee would then submit a final list of a specified number of candidates, ranked in order of preference, to the Regents for final selection. The Regents would agree to be bound to choose a new president only from the recommendations. In this way, the Regents' right to select the new president would be preserved, while the students' and faculty's right to scrutinize and respond to all potential candidates would not be denied. Only a system which guarantees both rights, along with the public's right to have input into the decision, is democratic, and just. And only such a procedure will assure a president sensitive to all the needs of the campus community, not just those of the Regents. Gary Gilmore, the last person executed in the United .States, wanted desperately to die. John Spenkelink, who may well be the next, wants just as desperately to live. But a federal appeals court in August rejected Spenkelink's appeal from a Florida murder conviction, leaving the 29-year- old drifter with only one more option-an appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court, which already has ruled Florida's death penalty law constitutional. Of the more than 400 people on death rows across the country, Spenkelink'scase is the furthest advanced through legal channels. Florida Gov. Reubin Askew has signed the warrant for his execution, which could occur by the end of the year. Some (stdtes) By Art Goldberg and Nan Blitman such as Maine, Mmnesota and Wisconsin, have not had capital punish- ment for more than 60 years, with no ap-, escape from a California prison.' Syzmankiewicz also had a long criminal record. The record is probably what impelled a reluctant Gov. Askew to pick out Spenkelink from nine capital cases and sign the death warrant. Ironically, there are two condemned prisoners in Florida who want to die, but their cases have not yet been fully processed through a mandatory review procedure. Publicly, Askew favors capital punishment. But he has said privately that he hopes no one is executed while he is stifl in office. His term ends in January, but Florida officials believe the executon could come before then if the U.S. Supreme Court denies his appeal. This would give Askew the option of either allowing the execution to go forward while he is still governor or commuting the sentence. Like a growing number of public officials, Askew appears to have doubts about capital punishment. IN THE PAST two years, Govs. Hugh Carey of New York, Jerry Brown of California, Ray Blanton of Tennessee, Brendan Byrne of New Jersey, Marvin Mandel of Maryland and Milton Shapp of Pennsylvania have all vetoed death penalty bills, even though public opinion favors such legislation, by about two to one, according to public opinion polls. Currently, 32 states have valid death penalty statutes. Some, such as Maine, Minnesota and Wisconsin, have not had capital punishment for more than 60 years, with no appreciable higher homicide rate than neighboring states with death penalty laws. Even the Supreme Court has trouble with capital punishment. In 1972 it struck down most existing death penalty laws, saying they were unconstitutional because they were being arbitrarily and discriminatorily applied. At that time eight of the nine justices said they personally opposed capital punishment. MANY STATES, including Florida, then rewrote their death penalty laws. -In '1976 the high court seemed to reverse itself. It held that capital punishment could be constitutional if it was carried out under clear, consistent guidelines, but it was not made mandatory. Once again, it invalidated a large amount of death penalty laws, but upheld those in Florida, Georgia and Texas. In 1977 the Supreme Court ruled that no one could be sentencedto death for rape or kipnapping. In July 1978 it ordered states to restructure laws so that a defendant could present to the sentencing judge the widest possible range of mitigating factors about his character, record or circumstances of the crime. The 1978 decision removed 140 people from death row and invalidated death penalty laws in Ohio, Arizona and Pennsylvania. "It may be that although the Supreme Court has found the death penalty constitutional, it may find no constitutional way to apply it," observed Henry Schwarzchild of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), which has long opposed capital punishment. SPENKELINK'S attorneys are expected to lean heavily on the 1978 Supreme Court decision in their appeal and argue that th jury had recommended the death, sentence and the judge who imposed it were not able to consider all the mitigating ciircumstances in the case. They will also contend that his sentence was a reaction to an abnormal zeal to apply the death penalty, which had been enacteed preciably higher homicide rates than neighboring states with death penalty laws. OPPONENTS OF capital punishment, fearful that Spenkelink's death in Florida's electric chair might set off a "bloodbath" of state-sanctioned' executions, have begun scrambling for new arguments to present to the high court. Ray Marky, Florida's assistant attorney general, disagrees with the bloodbath notion. "There was no bloodbath after Gary Gilmore was shot," he said, "although many people predicted there would be." Florida has more than 100 people on death row; eight are in the final stages of appeal. Before Gilmore was shot by a Utah firing squad in January 1977, no one had been executed in the United States in 10 years. Many legal observers believe that Gilmore would still be alive had he not abandoned his right to appeal and demanded to be shot. Spenkelink; however, has maintained from the outset that he accidentally shot his traveling companion, Joseph Syzmankiewicz, during a scuffle in a Tallahassee motel room while trying to reclaim money he says Syzmankiewicz stole from him. HE ALSO CONTENDS that the older, more forceful companion made him commit acts of sodomy at gunpoint and forced him to participate in games of Russian roulette. Like Gilmore, Spenkelink is white and has a long criminal record, including two armed robbery convictions and an in Florida just before Spenkeink's 1973 crime. "John's is not a traditbnal death penalty-type case," said one of his.attorneys, Joel Beger of the Legal Defense Fund o the National Association for the Advancement of Colored Peple (NAACP). "The death penalty is usually reserved for people who kill total strangers, either duing a robbery, or in sme particularlu grueome fashioa. "There have been a'lot nastier cases in Florida where it hasnot been imposed. Courts generally don't hand down death sentenes when the victim and perpetrator have known each other. SPENKELINK'S NAACP at- torneys will also try to save thir white client by arguig, ironically, that Florida's capia "It may be thet although the Supreme Court has found tlIe death penalty con- stitutional, it may find no constitutional way to apply it... ." -Henry Schwartz child (ACLU punishment law is racially biased against blacl. They probably will ask the Supreme Court to overturn the Florida law because, under it, 90 percent of those sentenced to deati have been killers of whites, whe only 8 per cent were killers of >lacks. They will say that kill's are rarely sentenced to die when their victim is black. Robert Shevin, Flirida's attorney general, a lending proponent of capital punisiment and a strong candidate to suceed Askew as governor,sdeems such argumets "frivolous" deaying tactics. And Assistant atty. Gen. Marky is confident the purt will find Florida's death pemlty law constitutional once again. "All I know is that 60 per cet of the people on death row in Florida are white" Marky sd, "and our laws must take into account a person's age, any economic or cultural deprivation they may have suffered and many other factors tefore they can be sentenced to death:" Nationally, about lalf of all death row inmates are black, but blacks comprise 11 percent of the population. They omiise about 23 per cent of Florida's population. Marky said the deati penalty is a deterrent. "It's not omething that I can prove to yoi though, he said. "Statisticallythere are just too many variable. Bit I do know this. It will eter the person who is executed rom ever killing again." Art Goldberg, a former editor at Ramparts and Agence France-Press, writes regularly for Pacifi News Service. Nan Blitmaz is a lawyer who specializesin legal matters for Pacific N'ews Service. ' mo e Pu E3 w c. It's not my job-you do it. . . Letters to the Daily To The Daily: .1 1 =77 o 11 - a _. ,t ., _ y .. y - -..._ -_- - . O a a : y+- v ,,._- . __----- - ----,cam k a R 1 , .... Daily labor reporter Mitch Cantor has done it again! Whenever an important campus labor event occurs, Daily readers can count on Cantor to write something absolutely inane about it. Cantor's commentary on the Sep- tember 15 labor/student demonstration ("Campus labor solidarity: Much talk little action", September 22) is no exception. In this letter, we want to take up two of Cantor's more glaring mistakes: 1) his lack of under- standing of labor solidarity, 2) his lack of un- derstanding of union democracy. The title of Cantor's article suggests that he would like to see campus solidarity move from talk to action. Having fought for that perspective for several years, so would we. Cantor, however, says what he means by ac- tive campus labor solidarity. The reason is simple; he doesn't know. Our view of the mat- ter is that the campus unions must solidarize with each other using the only really effective CANTOR HAS no more understanding of real democracy than he does of real labor solidarity. He puts forward the classic reac- tionary argument against democracy: democracy means weakness. "It is hard to see how labor groups are supposed to join for- ces and become stronger when each group is plagued with internal dissension." To this he adds a classic piece of red-baiting against the militant caucuses in the campus unions: "These caucuses campaign for their own goals at a rally intended to unify labor for- ces." What goals? Cantor, of course, doesn't say. Well, what goals were the three militant caucuses campaigning for a the September 15 demonstratign? In immediate terms, the most important goal was a campus-wide strike in March 1979, i.e. moving campus labor solidarity from talk to action. What bet- ter place to campaign for campus labor. solidarity in action than at a campus labor own petty privileges and powers. The pesent leaderships of both AFSCME Local 158 and GEO have consistently opposed a strikteven by their own organizations. They are terified of the idea of a campus-wide strike. Caapus labor might win for a change and horors! That might make management mad. A the September 15 demonstration only the )CC spokesperson endorsed the perspective f a campus-wide strike. THIS IS WHERE democracy comes in In Local 1583 and GEO the leaderships oppse active campus labor solidarity. What can he proponents of active labor solidarity do? Thy have no choice but to use the democracytf their unions to fight politically against tie misleaderships of those unions. How can tts be done? Only by forming militant caucuss for causing "dissension," Cantor says, in - fect; democracy is fine so long as nobody use it. This is consistent with his real position di campus labor solidarity: action is fine so lonj as nobody does anything. 0 _